I hate the whole publicly traded model of companies. I hate capitalism. But have to engage in trading stocks (I mostly do Mutual Funds and a small quantity of direct stocks) so that my money doesn’t lose value by sitting in a bank or cash.

Same thing with credit cards, don’t like taking loans and getting marked on a centralised list for that but it’s a safer option than using your own money.

Fortunately I don’t do crypto so that’s a plus.

  • leftofthat [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    Trading stocks on speculation is just gambling against the random nature of the market. It’s no different than going to a blackjack table and can be fun (also dangerous and addicting). You’re not engaging in capitalism you’re engaging in a game with other players (traders).

    Owning stocks like in a 401k investment account is different. I won’t do it. At least with pensions (i.e. a pension fund) you could gain some sort of political purpose through its corporate and government investments. This led to famous instances of corruption, as well, but it still demonstrates the political power of the investment.

    The 401k destroyed that. It’s now just all of the rent seeking with none of the voice. Pure liberalism. They’re literally passing laws in states right now that make it ILLEGAL to consider what you’re investing in and if it’s an ethical business or not.

    Saying that you have to invest in stocks or else you’ll lose money is like saying you have to vote for Biden or else you’ll lose rights. I don’t really give a shit if you do either, and your personal situation is something I don’t know about. But both should make you feel dirty, yes.

    Owning stocks isn’t just existing under capitalism. This isn’t treat discourse. You’re not buying an Xbox that someone was exploited into making. When you own a stock, you are the capitalist. Owning part of the company gives you a part of what’s taken from the employees or others, directly. A lot of common retirement investment is with large funds that own real estate. When you get your 5% return on your investment it’s not just magically growing on a tree. It’s coming from rents.

    There’s no functional difference to buying a $200,000 apartment and renting it out as a landlord or putting $200,000 in a 401k managed retirement fund that owns several hundred apartments buildings. And they do.

    There are more ethical ways to invest money than owning stocks.

    • WhatDoYouMeanPodcast [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      I would at least sympathize with the idea that in a worthwhile society someone who has served the country their entire life deserves a dignified retirement funded by people of working age. Insofar as that goes, the money in a 401k doesn’t grow on trees, but it’s still a reasonable way to appropriate the funds theoretically.

        • TheLepidopterists [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          Social security is not sufficient to provide for a retiree on its own, and assuming the bourgeois vampires in Congress won’t kill it completely is a huge gamble.

          • leftofthat [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            They’re destroying social security because it’s good and it works, yes. I’m not telling anyone to gamble on it being around.

                • TheLepidopterists [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                  10 months ago

                  What’s that have to do with social security?

                  debatebro-l

                  Love to pretend not to understand the context of my conversations so I can score debate points or something.

                  For working class Americans, there are 3 options:

                  1. 401k
                  2. Try to rely on social security exclusively, in spite of the fact that it’s both insufficient and likely to disappear, realize this is nonsensical and move to 3
                  3. Work until you drop dead

                  Just want to be sure, you think everyone who isn’t independently wealthy should just do 3), because doing 1) is immoral? Do you feel I’m misrepresenting your position here? It’s easy to get misinterpreted in text so I want to be 100% sure that you’re not saying something else.

                  • leftofthat [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                    10 months ago

                    If the only two options for investing are “become a ghoulish rent seeker” or “don’t do that” then yeah that’s where it would come down

                    You didn’t mention “become a landlord” as an option. Why not? That’s a perfectly viable path for many working class Americans to retire into.

    • Juice [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      Individual, alienated, consumer decisions are ethical? This is what happens when no class analysis. Landlords aren’t bad because they make money from rents. Landlords are bad because their interests align with the interests of the ruling class, and they oppose the interests of the working class, who they exploit as a class. the contingent material realities of owning property for the sole purpose of getting personal income has the effect of changing peoples beliefs and behaviors. The system warps their worldview and pits them against the workers, but it is the system that benefits one class by exploiting another that is the enemy, not individual landlords. It is the system that alienates and exploits.

      There are undoubtedly evil, unethical people who are drawn to real estate and speculation, and I would have serious reservations calling the bourgeois capitalist executive of some giant real estate development/property management company a “good person.” But an individual owner of a 200k property (which is essentially nothing, a tiny house far from any urban area), which may have come to them through a lifetime of earnings, or just lucked into it or inherited it from a family member, is not by default a class enemy or individually ontologically evil. They may become that, though owning a single small property wouldn’t produce much income; forcing them to either sell or expand with the market.

      I really don’t see the point of lecturing somebody over a fucking 401k. Must be nice living in a perfectly hermetically sealed ethical bubble, into which no evil ever permeates. People out here calling themselves leftists while recreating the underlying logic of religious purity politics.

    • Ufot [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      Maybe you can enlighten me on more ethical ways to invest my money because at this point I think not putting money into a 401k is a terrible financial decision.

      Tax deferred compounding interest is too good of a deal for the average person to pass up. Over 30 years you’ll be looking at anywhere from 100-150% return on investment.

      $50 a paycheck for 30 years with 5% avg return turns your $39k total contributions into $100k in retirement savings. $100 turns $78k in total contributions into $200k savings.

      For many people who find saving difficult, me included, being able to set it and forget it, plus the understanding it needs to be for retirement to get the full return, has allowed me to save money I would have spent/wasted otherwise.

      Due to the compounding factor, the sooner a person starts the better the return, so to discourage young people to not put money into a 401k is IMO actively harmful.

      IMO It’s like telling someone they shouldn’t have health insurance. Yeah it’s bullshit that society forces us to participate in a fucked up system but not having it puts future you at a terrible risk.

      • leftofthat [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        10 months ago

        Just to clarify: a 401k is just a savings account that is tax deferred. By itself that doesn’t make any money or interest. Most people then take that money and have it invested. That’s what I’m commenting on.

        The return in a 401k is from (typically) a managed fund or an index fund. It’s a good return, as you note. That’s because it’s largely from rent extraction.

        It’s a great deal if you are ok with functionally owning a small apartment in some other state where a family pays half their paycheck so that you get your 5% return on investment. But know that is what is happening.

        The whole “I have no other choice” position is past any point I’m trying to make. I don’t know anyone’s specific situation.

        • Ufot [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          What are ethical ways people could/should invest their money into instead?

          I’m not going to ever be a landlord, but I want to retire at the point.